Each individual school "should" post a listing of the jobs you can get after you receive your degree. The following is a listing of information from the school I got my undergrad at (
(http://www.wiu.edu): There are numerous types of employers for criminal justice majors including federal, state, and local government as well as private employers. Employment opportunities are excellent in areas with growing populations. A bachelor's degree is often required for most state and federal positions and is becoming increasingly required for municipal and county positions.
Law Enforcement
The law enforcement and justice administration program prepares individuals for careers within law enforcement agencies. The program provides professional knowledge, understanding, and skills for line police officers and investigators, as well as preparation for staff and administrative positions in local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies.
Among those agencies employing LEJA graduates are:
* Municipal police departments
* County sheriffs' offices
* Regional law enforcement units
* State police agencies
* State regulatory agencies (i.e., conservation, agriculture, motor vehicle, university police)
* Federal law enforcement agencies (i.e., Federal Bureau of Investigation, Internal Revenue Service, Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Customs, drug enforcement agencies)
* Federal regulatory agencies (i.e., health and human services; agriculture; immigration; U.S. Park Service)
Courts
Services needed today include presentence investigation, communication with potential jurors, maintaining official records, certifying records of court orders, and establishing court calendars.
Career options include:
* Court administrator
* Court investigator
* Court personnel
* Probation officer
Corrections/Probation
Opportunities within these areas include detention, rehabilitation programming, parole, and community-based programs such as halfway houses, drug treatment centers, and alcohol detoxification centers.
Career options include:
* Parole officer
* Personnel in local detention facilities (juvenile and adult)
* Correctional officer
* Alternatives to detention programs
Planning and Research
This area of employment is involved with tasks such as analyzing needs, evaluating programs, writing grants, preparing and analyzing statistical data for public information, building databases, and doing crime-specific planning.
Career opportunities include:
* Criminal justice planner/researcher (state and regional)
* Consultant to municipal, county, or state governmental agencies.
Security Administration
Security careers are as abundant and diverse as those in law enforcement and there are opportunities for management trainee positions. Areas of employment opportunities in security exist in computer agencies, warehouses, casinos, governmental facilities, and more. Wherever people desire to protect their property or assets, security measures will usually develop.
Career options include:
* Retail security
* Industrial security
* Hospital security
* Hotel/motel security
* Railroad or airport security
* Private security (i.e., Pinkerton, Wells-Fargo, Burns)
* Insurance investigator
* Private investigator
* Teaching
* Military police
* Paralegal assistant
Other Education Options
* Graduate school
* Law school